Reflective Equilibrium Hassan Masoud Jan. 30, 2012
Reflective Equilibrium
Hassan Masoud
Jan. 30, 2012
Reference
• Norman Daniels: Reflective Equilibrium (SEP)
• James Young: The Coherence Theory of Truth
(SEP)
• Jonathan Kvanvig: Coherentist Theories of
Epistemic Justification (SEP)
• Michael DePaul: Why Bother with Reflective
Equilibrium? In the book ‘Rethinking Intuition’
Introduction
“Many of us, perhaps all of us, have examined our moral judgments about a particular issue by looking for their coherence with our beliefs about similar cases and our beliefs about a broader range of moral and factual issues. In this everyday practice, we have sought “reflective equilibrium” among these various beliefs as a way of clarifying for ourselves just what we ought to do. In addition, we may also have been persuading ourselves that our conclusions were justifiable and ultimately acceptable to us by seeking coherence among them.” [Daniels, 1]
History
• Nelson Goodman: Fact, Fiction and Forecast
First edition: 1955; Fourth (last) edition: 1983
Harvard University Press
• John Rawls: A Theory of Justice
First edition: 1971; Revised edition: 1999
Harvard University Press
Definition (as a state)
Reflective Equilibrium: “A state in which all one’s thoughts about a topic fit together; in which there are no loose ends or recalcitrant elements that do not cohere with an overall position.”
Rawls: “the proper method of ethics should be one of trying to achieve reflective equilibrium, testing theories against judgments about particular cases, but also testing judgments about particular cases against theories, until equilibrium is achieved.” [Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy]
Definition (as a method)
“The method of reflective equilibrium consists in working back and forth among our considered judgments (some say our “intuitions”) about particular instances or cases, the principles or rules that we believe govern them, and the theoretical considerations that we believe bear on accepting these considered judgments, principles, or rules revising any of these elements whenever necessary in order to achieve an acceptable coherence among them.” [Daniels, 2]
The goal
“We arrive at an optimal equilibrium when the
component judgments, principles, and theories
are ones we are un-inclined to revise any further
because together they have the highest degree
of acceptability or credibility for us.” [Daniels, 3]
Applications
“The method of reflective equilibrium has been
advocated as a coherence account of
justification (as contrasted with an account of
truth) in several areas of inquiry, including
inductive and deductive logic as well as ethics
and political philosophy.” [Daniels, 3]
Coherentism
• The coherentist theories of truth
• The coherentist theories of justification
The coherence theory of truth
“A coherence theory of truth states that the truth of any (true) proposition consists in its coherence with some specified set of propositions.” [Young, 1]
The correspondence theory: the relationship between a proposition and objects
The coherence theory: the relationship between a proposition and other propositions
Coherence relation
• Consistency
• Entailment
• Mutual explanatory support
Specified set of propositions
• The largest consistent set of propositions
currently believed by actual people
• Those propositions which will be believed when
people like us (with finite cognitive capacities)
have reached some limit of inquiry
• the propositions which would be believed by an
omniscient being
Motivations for coherentism
• Metaphysical motivation
• Epistemological motivation
Metaphysical motivation for
coherentism
“Idealists do not believe that there is an
ontological distinction between beliefs and what
makes beliefs true. From the idealists’
perspective, reality is something like a collection
of beliefs. Consequently, a belief cannot be true
because it corresponds to something which is
not a belief. Instead, the truth of a belief can
only consist in its coherence with other beliefs.”
[Young, 4]
Epistemological motivation for
coherentism
1- A coherence theory of justification leads to a coherence theory of truth. There is no guarantee that a perfectly coherent set of beliefs matches objective reality.
2- We cannot get outside our set of beliefs and compare propositions to objective facts. We can only know that a proposition coheres with a set of beliefs. We can never know that a proposition corresponds to reality.
Objections to coherentism
• The specification problem
• The transcendence problem
The specification problem
Coherence theorists have no way to identify the
specified set of propositions without
contradicting their position.
Possibilities:
• Propositions which correspond to the fact
• The most comprehensive system (based on size,
simplicity, empirical adequacy)
The transcendence problem
A coherence theory of truth is unable to account for the fact that some propositions are true which cohere with no set of beliefs.
Truth transcends any set of beliefs. ‘Jane Austen wrote ten sentences on November 17th, 1807’ is either true or false. If it is false, some other proposition about how many sentences Austen wrote that day is true. No proposition, however, about precisely how many sentences Austen wrote coheres with any set of beliefs and we may safely assume that none will ever cohere with a set of beliefs.
Coherentism ?=? Idealism
Coherentism denies some principles of realism:
• The principle of bivalence (every proposition is
either true or false)
• The principle of transcendence (a proposition
might be true even though it cannot known to
be true)
Coherentist theories of justification
• The coherentist theories of justification are
defined as opposed to the foundationalist
theories. These theories are different responses
to the regress problem.
Justification
• Justification is the requirement for a true belief
to be counted as a piece of knowledge.
• Knowledge = justified true belief
The regress problem
• If any belief has to be justified in order to be
accepted, what can be said about those beliefs
which are intended to support the former?
• Three possibilities:
1- The chain of reasoning is infinitely long
2- The chain of reasoning stops somewhere
3- The chain of reasoning goes in a circle
Foundationalism vs. Coherentism
• Foundationalist theories of justification choose the
second possibility. They introduce basic beliefs as
the stopping point of the chain of reasoning.
• The linear version of coherentism chooses the third
option and accepts the circularity of the chain of
reasoning.
• The holistic version of coherentism rejects the
trilemma and denies that the chain of reasoning
should be linear.
The holistic account of justification
• Neurath’s ship:
“We are like sailors who on the open sea must reconstruct their ship but are never able to start afresh from the bottom. Where a beam is taken away a new one must at once be put there, and for this the rest of the ship is used as support. In this way, by using the old beams and driftwood the ship can be shaped entirely anew, but only by gradual reconstruction.”
The holistic account of justification
• Quine’s fabric:
“The totality of our so-called knowledge or beliefs, from the most casual matters of geography and history to the profoundest laws of atomic physics or even of pure mathematics and logic, is a man-made fabric which impinges on experience only along the edges. Or, to change the figure, total science is like a field of force whose boundary conditions are experience. A conflict with experience at the periphery occasions readjustments in the interior of the field. Truth values have to be redistributed over some of our statements. Re-evaluation of some statements entails re-evaluation of others, because of their logical interconnections.” [Two Dogmas]
The main issues
• The two main issues in any coherentist theory
of justification:
1- The things that must cohere in order for a given
belief to be justified
2- The relation that must hold among these things
in order for the belief in question to be justified.
• Both features can be given subjective or
objective construals.
The Things Over Which Coherence is
Defined
• From a subjective viewpoint:
– the agent’s set of beliefs
• From some objective viewpoints:
– Social version: common knowledge
– Religious version: some theological doctrine
• Standard versions of coherentism are subjective about the items relative to which coherence is defined.
• The objective viewpoints deny the perspectival character of justification, according to which whether or not one's beliefs are justified depends on facts about oneself and one's own perspective on the world.
The Things Over Which Coherence is
Defined
• Belief is not the only subjective item to which a
theorist might appeal.
• Coherentism need not prohibit the subjective
system over which coherence is defined from
containing experiential states.
The relation of coherence
“The most popular objective approach is
explanatory coherentism, which defines
coherence in terms of that which makes for a
good explanation. On such a view, hypotheses
are justified by explaining the data, and the data
are justified by being explained by our
hypotheses. The central task for such a theory is
to state conditions under which such
explanation occurs.” [Kvanvig, 10]
The relation of coherence
In another objective approach (BonJour):
1- Logical consistency
2- The extent to which the system in question is probabilistically consistent
3- The extent to which inferential connections exist between beliefs, both in terms of the number of such connections and their strength
4- The inverse of the degree to which the system is divided into unrelated, unconnected subsystems of belief
5- The inverse of the degree to which the system of belief contains unexplained anomalies [Kvanvig, 10]
Problems with BonJour’s criteria
• we need to know how to weight each of these
factors to provide an assessment of the overall
coherence of the system.
• not all beliefs are justified to the same degree.
So, we need subjective accounts to
accommodate the concept of a degree of belief.
Subjective accounts of the relation of
coherence
Probabilistic Bayesianism:
• Probabilistic coherence: A (degree of) belief is
justified if and only if it is part of a system of
beliefs against which no dutch book can be made.
• Conditionalization requirement: When new
information is learned, one's new degree of belief
match one's conditional degree of belief on that
information prior to learning it. [Kvanvig, 12]
Probabilistic Bayesianism
• Subjectivity: Each person has an internal,
subjective theory of evidence at a given time, in
the form of conditional beliefs concerning all
possible future courses of experience.
• Coherentist: Coherence obtains when a belief
conforms to the subjective theory of evidence
in question, given the other items in the set of
belief.
Problems for coherentism
• 1- Problems related to the basing relation
“An account of the basing relation is needed to
explain the difference between a situation where
a person has good evidence for a belief, but
believes it for other reasons, and a situation
where has person holds the belief because of, or
on the basis of, the evidence.” [17]
The basing relation
A distinction:
• A doxastically justified belief: where the belief is
based on the evidence for it
• A propositionally justified belief: when there is
good evidence for the belief, but the belief is
held on other grounds
The basing relation
• An example:
“Let the contents of the beliefs be p, q, r, s, and t. Further, let each belief imply the next in sequence, i.e., p implies q, q implies r, and so forth. Assume as well that p, q, r, and s are all justified for the person in question. If so, a person can come to justifiably believe t by inferring from p to q to r to s and then to t. Suppose, however, that there are no other inferential relationships here besides the ones already assumed. If the order of inference were from p to s to r to q and then to t, believing t would not be justified.” [18-19]
The basing relation
• A coherentist reply:
to distinguish between that which justifies a belief and that which is epistemically relevant to the epistemic status of belief
The example:
20 levels of supporters and defeaters
- Does this any help?!
Problems for coherentism
2- The isolation objection (the input problem)
“Nothing about any requirement of coherence
dictates that a coherent system of beliefs need
receive any sort of input from the world or be in
any way causally influenced by the world.
(BonJour 1985, p. 108)”
The isolation problem
• A coherentist solution:
To include expriential states among the set of
things on which coherence is defined.
The truth connection
3- Problems related to the truth connection
• ‘Fiction’ objection:
“A longstanding objection to coherentism can
be expressed by noting that a good piece of
fiction will display the virtue of coherence, but it
is obviously unlikely to be true.” [22]
The truth connection
• ‘Alternative systems’ objection:
“There is always some coherent system to fit any
belief into, so that if a person were to make
sufficient changes elsewhere in the system, any
belief could be justified.” [23]
An objection to this one: Can it be done so easily?!
The truth connection
• Solutions to the truth connection problem:
1- If the isolation problem can be solved, the
problem of truth connection would be
prevented.
2- There are cases to show that justification is not
a reliable guide to truth:
- the lottery paradox
- the preface paradox [24]
Michael DePaul
Why bother with reflective equilibrium?
The method of reflective equilibrium
• This method “describes the approach the vast
majority of philosophers in fact follow”.
• “I’ll use moral theory as an example, but
remember that philosophical inquiry into other
matters, for example, knowledge, causation,
reference, or the nature of belief, is similarly
conducted.” [DePaul, 294]
The method
Step 1: The philosopher must begin her inquiry regarding morality with the moral beliefs she happens to have.
• Beliefs/judgments:
- Concerning actual things or actions
- About imaginary or hypothetical cases
- Regarding general principles
She should discard any belief or judgment formed in circumstances that obviously make error.
The method
Step 2: The next task is to construct a theory that
accounts for the remaining judgments.
Step 3: If she comes across any conflict between
theories and considered beliefs, she tries to
brings them into balance through a process of
mutual adjustment to both her theory and her
considered judgments.
The method
“The philosopher is not bound to revise the
theory so that it accords with these judgments.
Rather, she must attempt to determine, via
further reflection, whether it is the theory or the
judgments that, all things considered, she finds
more likely to be true, and then revise her beliefs
accordingly.” [295]
The method
“The philosopher must seek an even wider equilibrium. She must also consider the connections between her moral beliefs and principles and the other sorts of beliefs, principles and theories she accepts or rejects.”
The fair process of mutual adjustment:
“Neither moral nor epistemic beliefs nor any of the other beliefs that come into play are granted a privileged status.” [296]
The method
1- To reflect upon her beliefs and the logical and evidential interconnections among her beliefs
2- To try to construct theories that are intuitively appealing on their own and that account for various categories of beliefs
3- To resolve such conflicts as are uncovered in the course of these reflections and efforts at theory construction on the basis of what comes to seem most likely to be correct as a result of still further reflection [297]
What reflective equilibrium cannot do
1- This method provides no guarantee that it will lead inquirers to true beliefs. [297]
“The entire process is guided by nothing more than the inquirer’s own beliefs, judgments, and what seems to the inquirer to be correct upon reflection, given enough screwy initial belief and unusual judgments about how to resolve conflicts, an inquirer could end up accepting just about anything in reflective equilibrium.” [297]
What reflective equilibrium cannot do
2- The method of reflective equilibrium will not
even reliably lead inquirers to the truth. [298]
Argument:
I- Almost all philosophers and other thinkers use
this method.
II- There is a considerable amount of
disagreement among them.
What reflective equilibrium cannot do
3- The method of reflective equilibrium cannot be
counted on to yield justified belief. [299]
Argument:
I- Some theories of justification are reliablist.
II- Justification must be truth conducive.
III- At least it should be objective.
- So, why do we follow this method?
- Because any other method of inquiry is
irrational.
Alternatives
Any alternative approach would either:
(A)Abandon reflection altogether
(B)Direct the inquirer to reflect, but to do so incompletely, that is, to leave certain beliefs, principles, theories, or what have you out of account
(C)Not allow the results of the inquirer’s reflections to determine what the inquirer goes on to believe.
Alternatives
• (A) Abandoning reflection:
- Either to stick to what she happens to believe.
- Or, to follow an authority without any
reflection or examination.
Both cases lead to self-contradiction.
Alternatives
• (B) Reflecting incompletely
Innocuous examples:
Biologists or physicists; judges or jurors
Other cases (neglecting some parts of beliefs
without reflection or without any justification)
lead to self-contradiction.
Alternatives
• (C) Not believing what seems most likely to be
true
This case more obviously leads to self-
cotradiction.
The open question
• What about truth?
• Must there be a commitment to the coherence
theory of truth in the method of reflective
equilibrium?
Daniels’ article (SEP)
• The main difference between Daniels and
DePaul is their view about justificatory value of
the method of reflective equilibrium.
Justificatory value
“The key idea underlying this view of justification is that we “test” various parts of our system of beliefs against the other beliefs we hold, looking for ways in which some of these beliefs support others, seeking coherence among the widest set of beliefs, and revising and refining them at all levels when challenges to some arise from others... By extension of this account, a person who holds a principle or judgment in reflective equilibrium with other relevant beliefs can be said to be justified in believing that principle or judgment.” [3]
Foundationalist approaches in ethics
Some subset of our moral beliefs must be:
• Fixed or unrevisable
• Immediately or directly justified
• Justifiable independently of the rest of our
moral beliefs
Problems of moral foundationalism
• Appeal to a moral sense or faculty
• Appeal to apriority of moral intuitions
Using RE in justification of logic
“Goodman's idea was that we justify rules of inference in inductive or deductive logic by bringing them into reflective equilibrium with what we judge to be acceptable inferences in a broad range of particular cases. No rule of inference would be acceptable as a logical principle if it was not compatible with what we take to be acceptable instances of inferential reasoning... At the same time, we should correct or revise our views about particular inferences we initially might think are acceptable if we come to see them as incompatible with rules that we generally accept and refuse to reject because they, in turn, best account for a broad range of other acceptable inferences.” [5-6]
A problem with Goodman’s theory
• Not all elements of the everyday reasoning
practices of all individuals are justifiable.
Example of fallacious inductive inference:
- The gambler’s fallacy
Example of fallacious deductive inference:
- The psychological studies on the affirming the
consequent and denying the antecedent
Goodman’s reply
“He insists that practice can and should be
corrected as we work back and forth from
tentative principles to practice, revising where
appropriate, presumably eliminating the sorts of
inconsistencies that some psychological studies,
and our everyday experiences, reveal.” [6]
RE in ethics and political philosophy
• Rawl’s theory of “justice as fairness”
• Rawls argues that the goal of a theory of justice
is to establish the terms of fair cooperation that
should govern free and equal moral agents.
Rawls’ theory of “justice as fairness”
• Step 1: To choose initial principles (the context of discovery)
“The appropriate perspective from which to choose among competing conceptions or principles of justice is a hypothetical social contract or choice situation in which contractors are constrained in their knowledge, motivations, and tasks in specific ways... Under these constraints ... rational contractors would choose principles guaranteeing equal basic liberties and equality of opportunity, and a principle that permitted inequalities only if they made the people who are worst off as well off as possible.” [8-9]
Rawls’ theory of “justice as fairness”
• Step 2: To revise considered principles (the context of justification)
“The chosen principles must also match our considered judgments about justice in reflective equilibrium. If they do not, then we are to revise the constraints on choice in the contract situation until we arrive at a contract that yields principles that are in reflective equilibrium with our considered judgments about justice.” [8]
Narrow Reflective Equilibrium
“To the extent that we focus solely on particular cases
and a group of principles that apply to them, and to the
extent that we are not subjecting the views we
encounter to extensive criticism from alternative moral
perspectives, we are seeking only narrow reflective
equilibrium. Presumably, the principles we arrive at in
narrow equilibrium best “account for” the cases
examined. Others, however, may arrive at different
narrow reflective equilibria, containing different
principles and judgments about justice.” [10]
Wide Reflective Equilibrium
“In a wide reflective equilibrium, for example, we broaden the field of relevant moral and non-moral beliefs (including general social theory)to include an account of the conditions under which it would be fair for reasonable people to choose among competing principles, as well as evidence that the resulting principles constitute a feasible or stable conception of justice, that is, that people could sustain their commitment to such principles.” [12]
But not too wide?
“The device of the contract is thus in reflective equilibrium with certain background theories that themselves contain moral beliefs... If Rawls were trying to justify the structure of the contract by appeal to theories that themselves were completely non-moral, then he would be offering the kind of independent justification for the principles that would characterize them as foundational, so the claim that the background theories are themselves moral is part of the rationale for concluding that Rawls is clearly rejecting foundationalism.” [12-13]
Justice as political
• “In A Theory of Justice, Rawls seemed to think that all people might converge on a common or shared wide reflective equilibrium that included “justice as fairness,” the conception of justice for which he argues.” [13]
• “In his later work, Political Liberalism (Rawls 1993), Rawls abandons the suggestion that all people might converge in the same, shared wide reflective equilibrium that contains his conception of justice.” [14]
Justice as political
“Complexity, uncertainty, and variation in experience lead human reason, when exercised under conditions of freedom, of the sort protected by the principles of justice as fairness, to an unavoidable pluralism of comprehensive moral and philosophical views. This unavoidable fact of reasonable pluralism makes one key feature of justice as fairness untenable, namely the account Rawls gave of the stability of his preferred conception of justice.” [14]
Stability
“The test for stability is to ask if people raised
under this view would conform to it over time
with less strain of commitment than other
conceptions would face. In effect, passing the
test shows it is worth adopting this view because
it will not prove so fragile that it is not worth the
effort to institutionalize.” [14]
The new method
• The problem: The plurality of ideas would
prevent the society from reaching a common
point.
• To address this problem, Rawls recasts justice as
fairness as a “freestanding” political conception
of justice on which people with different
comprehensive views may agree in an
“overlapping consensus.”
Political Reflective Equilibrium
“The public justification of such a political conception involves no appeal to the philosophical or religious views that appear in the comprehensive doctrines that form this overlapping consensus. Instead, we might think of this process of working back and forth among the key shared ideas in the public, democratic culture and the articulated features of the political conception of justice as a political reflective equilibrium.” [15]
Political Reflective Equilibrium
In A theory of Justice, shared philosophical arguments justify key elements of the method, but in Political Liberalism, the support for each of the elements must derive from the distinctive features of the various comprehensive views. For example, “a Kantian, a Millian, and a religious person who believed in free faith might all support, but for quite different reasons, the idea that agents were free in the sense of being capable of forming and revising their conceptions of the good life.” [18]
Criticisms of Reflective Equilibrium
1- Objection from a utilitarian point of view
Central to the method of reflective equilibrium
in ethics and political philosophy is the claim
that our considered moral judgments about
particular cases carry weight, if only initial
weight, in seeking justification.
Criticisms of Reflective Equilibrium
• A traditional criticism of utilitarianism is that it leads us to moral judgments about what is right that conflict with our “ordinary” moral judgments.
• A utilitarian response to this claim is that these judgments as pre-theoretical “intuitions” that probably result from cultural indoctrination and thus reflect superstition, bias, and mere historical accident. On this view, moral intuitions or judgments should have no evidentiary credentials and should play no role in moral theory construction or justification. [20]
Criticisms of Reflective Equilibrium
2- Rejection of Rawls’s Constructivism
Rawls claims that his view of justice is
constructivist, meaning that he appeals to some
general claims about the nature of persons as
well as some empirical facts about human
behavior or institutions as part of the
justification for the principles of justice.
Criticisms of Reflective Equilibrium
• Cohen’s Objection:
Constructivism combines considerations of
justice with other considerations (both empirical
and moral). As a result, it does not tell us what
justice itself requires.
Criticisms of Reflective Equilibrium
• A reply to Cohen:
A possible reply to Cohen is that his view about
constructivism collapses into his controversial
metaethical claim that principles of justice
cannot rest on general facts about human
behavior or anything else.
Criticisms of Reflective Equilibrium
3- Epistemological criticisms
• The vagueness of the concept of coherence
• The inseparability of coherence accounts of
justification from coherence accounts of truth
• The overemphasis on the human rationality
Thank You!